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Creature
Comforts
It
takes a village to raise a delusion
BY
JASON BLAIR
LARS
AND THE REAL GIRL: Directed by Craig Gillespie. Written by Nancy
Oliver. Cinematography, Adam Kimmel. Music, David Tom. Starring
Ryan Gosling, Emily Mortimer, Paul Schneider, Kelli Garner and Patricia
Clarkson. MGM, 2007. PG-13. 106 minutes. 
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During the final season of Six Feet Under,
the occasionally frustrating, ultimately uplifting drama about family,
forgiveness and life after death, I watched an episode I still think
about today. Entitled "Ecotone," a reference to the boundary between
two environments, it reveals the final dreams of a comatose Nate
Fisher (Peter Krause). In the last dream, after an exuberant road
trip to the beach, Nate runs wildly into the surf while his brother
David, who appears to be having the same dream, stands frightened
on the shore. In the hospital room, only one brother wakes up. If
you followed the show, the sense of loss was physical; it was an
event both inexplicable and necessary to conclude the series. The
writer of that episode, Nancy Oliver, has now written her first
film, Lars and the Real Girl, a comedy that makes the above
scenes feel quaint by comparison.
Like Six Feet Under, Lars and the Real
Girl isn't for everyone. After all, it's about a boy in love
with a sex doll in rural, heterogeneous Wisconsin. (Imagine a blow-up
doll with the, well, stiffness of a mannequin.) But this
isn't a film about the thwartedness and bewilderment of small-town
life, where being different, in the paranoid view Hollywood favors,
can easily get you killed. Instead, director Craig Gillespie presents
Lars as a tender fable about community and the importance
of valuing our differences. It's a message we've been taught hundreds,
if not thousands of times, from the stories of Aesop to films like
Mask and Radio. But what elevates Lars above
similar fare is the way Ryan Gosling, playing Lars somewhere along
the autism spectrum, manages to convey kindness and affection but
also loneliness and terror, often in rapid succession. Since nothing
terrifies him more than being touched, his doll "Bianca" is a fitting
solution.
Films such as this one need a sage or guide, a wise
elder to douse the flames of hysteria. In Lars, that person
is Dr. Dagmar, played with sadness and calm by the masterful Patricia
Clarkson. It's Dagmar who creates a safe place for Lars to play
out his delusion. But here, Lars avoids the familiar: The
townspeople accept Bianca from the get-go, creating a life for Bianca
that Lars never could, such as electing her to the school board.
It's only Gus (Paul Schneider), Lars' older brother, who detests
the "big plastic thing" (although he actually just detests, and
blames, himself). Gus' reaction is, "We gotta fix him!" while his
wife Karin (a touching Emily Mortimer) wonders whether Lars might
not have the better deal.
The film maintains with tremendous confidence a
delicate balance between morality tale and offbeat comedy. In addition
to adjusting to Bianca's arrival, I had to adjust to Gus' reactions
to Bianca, which I felt I might tire from easily. But Gus, like
everyone, finds a way to accept Bianca, until Lars must choose between
fantasy and reality. Lars could easily have faltered as Bianca's
status changes, but instead I found the last act the most enjoyable
of the film. That old cliché that goes "I laughed, I cried…"?
I did both, simultaneously, for the only time I can remember. If
for no other reason, see Lars and the Real Girl for Gosling,
who is fast becoming the most interesting actor working today. If
Gosling can make you believe in his love for Bianca, there's not
much he cannot do.
Lars and the Real Girl is now playing at VRC
Stadium 15.
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